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Lego fan creates 250,000 brick 'Garrison of Moriah'

Usually, the only constraint on building a Lego creation is your imagination. Unless, that is, you build a giant structure that demands its own "Lego Room".

One Lego fan has done just that: say hello to the Garrison of Moriah, and the 50-metre-square room it inhabits. Inspired by the fantastic buildings featured likes of Star Wars and

Lord of the Rings, Garrison-creator Gerry Burrows has built a detailed (and huge) sculpture to scale of the tiny Lego people who have the honour of inhabiting it.

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Burrows has wanted to build big ever since his Lego fandom began as a child. However, it was the freedoms of maturity which allowed him to realise his construction dreams. He tells Wired.co.uk: "I entered what Lego fans call 'The Dark Ages' -- where I didn't do anything with Lego -- but when I graduated college and bought my first house I unpacked a box of my old Lego bricks. I started thinking how I now have the money and space to actually build the things I wanted to build; without a little sister to rampage through my Lego creations."

A combination of discovering BrickLink.com, "the Holy Grail of Lego buying", adapting a basement for building purposes ("I told our realtor that I needed a 'Lego room'. He thought I was joking at first.") and a week off of work resulted in the first Lego bricks being laid on what was to become the Garrison of Moriah.

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Making preparations for building, however, was just the first step. Amazingly, Burrows' building strategy took little planning, he tells Wired.co.uk: "Nothing ever touched paper or computer. But as I would start to build and focus on individual structures I would spend time thinking of the specific structures' design. As I built I would get inspiration on cool directions to take."

Burrows never suffered any disasters during construction. That's not to say, however, there weren't a few precautions taken in building such a mega-structure: "I learned to not jump or even flinch when stepping on a Lego piece in my bare feet," he says.

Currently, the Garrison of Moriah stands at 8.5 metres long, wrapping around 1/3 of the room, has a depth ranging between 60 and 150 cm and reaches between 2 and 3.6 metres tall -- and that's after shortening two structures to fit in the Lego Room. Burrows estimates he's used between 200,000 to 250,000 Lego bricks.

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However, the Garrison is set to expand further: "It's still growing. The bridge isn't complete, nor is the other end of the bridge. And I'm building a fleet of custom ships."

We're holding our breaths. Until then, check out the awesome Garrison of Moriah up close in our gallery below.